High school near St. Anna (Augsburg)
High school near St. Anna | |
---|---|
New building on Schertlinstrasse | |
type of school | Linguistic and humanistic high school |
founding | 1531 |
address |
Schertlinstrasse 5-7 |
place | augsburg |
country | Bavaria |
Country | Germany |
Coordinates | 48 ° 21 '17 " N , 10 ° 53' 19" E |
student | 707 (as of 2019) |
management | Peter Schwertschlager |
Website | www.gym-anna.de |
The grammar school near St. Anna in Augsburg was founded in 1531 during the Reformation as a Protestant educational institution ( Latin school ). With over 480 years, the high school near St. Anna is one of the oldest high schools in Germany.
Originally located in the city center near the eponymous church of St. Anna , the grammar school is now located in Augsburg's Antonsviertel on Schertlinstrasse. It is a grammar school with a modern language and humanistic branch, is attended by about 700 students and has a teaching staff of about 70 teachers.
history
From 1531
Founded in 1531, it is one of the oldest schools in Bavarian Swabia . From 1537 the institution was financed from the 1464 endowed study foundation of clergyman Ulrich Langenmantel vom Sparren . Originally the school was housed in the former Carmelite monastery in Augsburg (St. Anna). Sankt Annakollegium opened as a boarding school in 1582.
From 1613 to 1616 Elias Holl built his own building for the high school in the Renaissance style on the property next to the former monastery . In 1616 the school moved to this building and stayed there in the "Hollbau" on the Annahof for the next 351 years. In the 18th century the linguistic and humanistic grammar school acquired the reputation of an elite school.
The “Hollbau” near St. Anna (right ⊙ ), copper engraving by Simon Grimm, 1676.
After 1800
After secularization in 1807, the Protestant school near St. Anna in the parity imperial city was merged with the dissolved Jesuit college St. Salvator in the rooms of St. Anna. At the request of the citizens and supported by a donation to buy a building, the renewed separation of the schools was suggested in 1827 and carried out in 1835. The Catholic students moved to the high school near Sankt Stephan in the newly founded Benedictine Abbey of St. Stephan .
Around 1900 an extension was completed on Fuggerstrasse.
Since 1967
In 1967 the school left the building near St. Anna and moved to a new building on Schertlinstrasse in the Antonsviertel district . The former high school buildings in the city center, which are under monument protection , have found new uses. The "Hollbau" is used today by the Evangelical Forum Annahof for seminars and events. The extension at Fuggerstrasse 10 now serves as a courthouse.
In 1973 the new building of the grammar school on Schertlinstrasse was extended by a wing, the extension building, or E-building for short. Since May 2006, renovation work has been taking place in the former "Central Office for Computer Use in Classes", which was completed in April 2007. A cafeteria - the Annaretto -, a room for homework and afternoon care (HAnnA) and two seminar rooms were built there.
The school celebrated its 475th anniversary in the 2006/2007 school year. This was celebrated, among other things, with a ceremony in the Golden Hall of Augsburg City Hall , a festive service in the St. Anna Church and several musicals in the school gymnasium.
The high school at St. Anna has been a reference school for media education since 2011 . It has very good media equipment and a media charter.
Important school members
- (1501–1554): Sixtus Birck , playwright and hymn poet, from 1536 rector of the grammar school
- (1516–1580): Hieronymus Wolf , German humanist, from 1557 rector of the grammar school
- (1527–1602): Hieronymus Fröschel , lawyer, Augsburg historian and city lawyer
- (1545–1602): Nikolaus von Reusner , legal scholar, teacher at grammar school (1565–1566)
- (1548–1610): Johannes Busereuth , legal scholar, physician and university professor, high school student
- (1556–1617): David Höschel , German humanist, student and from 1593 rector of the grammar school
- (1573–1653): Elias Ehinger , Lutheran theologian, student and rector (1618–1629 and 1632–1635)
- (1577–1629): Thomas Wegelin , Lutheran theologian, student
- (1628–1686): Anton Reiser , Lutheran theologian, student and rector (1672–1675)
- (1684–1742): Johann Matthias Hase , mathematician, astronomer and geographer
- (1696–1770): Jakob Brucker , Protestant theologian and historiographer
- (1721–1788): Johannes Esaias Nilson , miniature painter, draftsman and engraver
- (1731–1808): Paul von Stetten , Augsburg city administrator
- (1759–1835): Daniel Eberhard Beyschlag , teacher and librarian, later rector of the grammar school
- (1761–1837): Ernst Häußler , music teacher, singer and composer
- (1761–1826): Jakob Hübner , entomologist
- (1761–1833): Carl Ludwig Giesecke , mineralogist
- (1773–1816): Gerhard Adam Neuhofer , writer and philologist
- (1781–1838): Johann Benedikt von Paris , treasurer of the Kingdom of Bavaria
- (1801–1874): Georg Caspar Mezger , pedagogue and librarian, pupil, professor and rector (1840–1872)
- (1802–1857): Albert Höfer , Catholic clergyman
- (1804–1879): Donat Müller , German composer
- (1808–1873): Charles Louis Napoléon Bonaparte , 1848 to 1852 French President and from 1852 to 1870 as Napoleon III. Emperor of the French
- (1814–1872): Anton Friedrich Spring , Professor of Medicine and Rector of the University of Liège
- (1820–1906): Gustav Bauer , mathematician
- (1827–1880): Konstantin Freiherr von Schaezler , Catholic theologian
- (1838–1893): Johannes von Widenmayer , lawyer and mayor of Munich
- (1839–1911): Ludwig Keller , mayor of Ansbach and member of the state parliament
- (1842–1928): Paul von Schmid , banker in Augsburg
- (1844–1910): Emil Schürer , Protestant theologian and Judaist
- (1865–1923): Ernst Troeltsch , Protestant theologian
- (1867–1942): Theodor Schmidt , member of the state parliament and theologian
- (1868–1949): Otto Stählin , classical philologist
- (1871–1949): Albert Rehm , classical philologist
- (1885–1889): Justus Köberle , Protestant theologian and Old Testament scholar
- (1887–1967): Hans Meinzolt , Protestant theologian and honorary professor
- (1891–1918): Adolf Ritter von Tutschek , fighter pilot
- (1904–1974): Erhart Kästner , writer
- (1907–1971): Willi Leininger , composer, music lecturer, journalist
- (1908–1984): Theodor Schieder , historian
- (1923–2014): Ernst Kern , surgeon and university professor
- (1928–2015): Wolfgang Fikentscher , lawyer
- (1935–2019): Wolfgang Frühwald , literary scholar
- (* 1938): Peter Kuhn , theologian, Judaist and university professor
- (1945–1982): Rainer Werner Fassbinder , director and film producer
- (* 1953): Bernd Roeck , historian
- (* 1957): Reinhold Leinfelder , paleontologist and geobiologist
- (* 1959): Ulrich Noethen , actor
- (* 1960): Michael Griebel , mathematician and computer scientist
- (* 1960): Heio von Stetten , actor
- (* 1961): Dieter Breit , Protestant theologian, policy officer of the ELKB
- (* 1979): Antonia Michaelis , author of books for children and young people
- (* 1983): Dominik Bösl , computer scientist, philosopher and university professor
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ Julius Hans: Contributions to the history of the Augsburg school system , in: Journal of the Historisches Verein für Schwaben and Neuburg , 4th year, Augsburg, 1878, p. 27; (Digital scan)
- ^ Franz Eugen von Seida and Landensberg : General royal-baierische Vaterlandskunde , Augsburg, 1807, pp. 554–557 of the year; (Digital scan)
- ↑ Media equipment. Retrieved on May 1, 2019 (German).